Showing posts sorted by relevance for query port paper. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query port paper. Sort by date Show all posts

Monday 6 October 2008

Monday's antidote for all the doom and gloom dominating the media

Thanks to a local journo for passing on these classics from A Steroid Hit The Earth: The Catastrophic World Of Misprints by Martin Toseland, published by Portico Books this month.

Misprints:

People in Preston ward are invited to a meeting at 7.15pm tonight in St Mary's Church Hall, Brighton, to meet councillors and beat police officers. (Evening Argus)

The skeleton was believed to be that of a Saxon worrier. (Express and Echo)

The strike leaders had called a meeting that was to have been held in a bra near the factory, but it was too small to hold them all. (South London Press)

One man was admitted to hospital suffering from buns. (Bristol Gazette)

Police in Hawick yesterday called off a search for a 20-year-old man who is believed to have frowned after falling into the swollen River Teviot. (The Scotsman)

The first aid treatment for a broken rib is to apply a tight bandage after you have made your patient expire. (Manchester Evening News)

Corrections:

Error: The Observer wishes to apologise for a typesetting error in our Tots and Toddlers advertising feature last week which led to Binswood Nursery School being described as serving 'children casserole' instead of chicken casserole. (Leamington Spa Observer)

'The name of this column is still Corrections and Clarifications*, although it is not immune from error as the printed title in yesterday's paper demonstrated.' *The column appeared as Corrections and Clairifications. (The Guardian)

Adverts:

Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council: Crematorium assistant required. The Council operates a no-smoking policy. (Sheffield Star)

Sports:

The mystery fan behind the takeover bid for Port Vale today said he will pull out of the deal if his identity is revealed. It is understood Stone-based businessman Peter Jackson wants to remain anonymous until the contract is signed and sealed. (Staffordshire Sentinel)

Friday 25 October 2019

A few facts about the NSW Minerals Council and how it operates as an industry lobbyist in 2019


Stephen John Galilee is currently Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the NSW Minerals Council, a private sector lobby group for the mining industry with less than 100 members – not all of which are directly engaged in mining activities.

The council conducts public and policy advocacy on behalf of the mining sector, with a staff of 15 full-time equivalent employees – 6 of whom are primarily engaged in work on policy and 5 or 6 engaged in public advocacy, communications & media activity.

Stephen Galilee’s previous employment was as chief of staff to then Liberal MP for Manly Mike Baird when he was Treasurer in the O’Farrell Coalition Government and, before that he was employed as chief of staff to Liberal MP for Groom Ian Mcfarlane when he was Minister for Industry, Tourism and Resources.

On 21 October Galilee gave evidence under oath before a NSW Independent Commission Against Corruption inquiry into lobbying practises in this state.

During his evidence Galilee confirmed that the NSW Minerals Council:
  • income is derived from annual membership fees which are set at a percentage or proportion of the value of members commodity production;
  • annual revenue is between est. $4 million to $8 million;
  • is an associate member of the Minerals Council of Australia;
  • meets with government officials “on a regular basis” and such meeting are sometimes with government ministers;
  • probably has face-to-face meetings with between four or five individual ministers at some point during the year which include council policy directors and/or the CEO;
  • has a “regular engagement with the Deputy Premier in his capacity as Minister for Resources”;
  • requests to see ministers are generally submitted by letter to their chiefs of staff (with reasons given), then followed up with a ‘phone call;
  • shadow ministers are also lobbied on occasion;
  • CEO has met with between 8 and 10 NSW Government ministers over the last 2 to 3 years and with 10 to 15 ministerial chiefs of staff. These often involve follow up meetings with ministers' offices, departments or specific policy personnel;
  • meets with the Resources Regulator and Environmental Protection Authority “every couple of months” and with the Dept of Planning’s Division of Resources and Geoscience “every two or three months”;
  • in the past four years has made “around 150 public submissions in response to government proposals for changes to legislation, policy or regulations”;
  • at the moment is regularly engaging with the Department of Planning concerning planning system issues, in particular provisions in the Environmental Planning & Assessment Act;
  • does not use the official form required since 2017 to request meetings with the Dept. of Planning;
  • has meetings with the Dept. of Planning which are not minuted;
  • CEO does not keep records of meeting he attends - often his record comprises only diary entry of meeting date and "three dot points on a piece of paper" to aid memory;
  • current focus in relation to policy advocacy regarding planning system issues is to reduce financial risk for mining/commodity investors which has been spurred on by United Wambo determination, Bylong Project decision and actions of the Independent Planning Commission;
  • is currently "running a public campaign against the Planning Minister and his planning system".
  • states that the government departments “take a lot of industry money to deliver services for us. So we like to make sure those services are being delivered...”; and
  • holds "a lot of functions and events for the industry and we invite local MPs, for example, to attend and ministers and shadow ministers from time to time come along to our functions and events".
[https://www.icac.nsw.gov.au/investigations/current-investigations/2019/lobbying-and-the-nsw-public-sector-operation-eclipse/the-regulation-of-lobbying-access-and-influence-in-nsw-a-chance-to-have-your-say-april-2019]


The NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment apparently considers the NSW Minerals Council an organisation containing 'inhouse' lobbyists not a third party lobbyist and therefore doesn't record contact with this group in its Lobbyist Contact Register to date.

Based on the evidence given  on 21 October, it is possible that there may have been times when no other person has been present at a meeting between a NSW Minister and the NSW Minerals Council.

It is also clear from the evidence that the NSW Minerals Council would be unhappy with any new legislation or regulations requiring a greater degree of transparency with regard to its lobbying activities.

At the same time the NSW Minerals Council does not appear to always trust that public officials and public authorities make decisions on cogent evidence in a balanced, detached, informative way - blaming public interest advocacy and "noisy objectors" for what it perceives as skewing outcomes.

As it now stands the NSW Minerals Council as a lobbyist group seems to be minimally regulated with regard to its activities.

BACKGROUND

NSW Minerals Council membership on its official website as of 23 October 2019:
Full Members
Anchor Resources Limited
Australian Pacific Coal Limited
BHP

Bengalla Mining Company Pty Ltd
The Bloomfield Group

Centennial Coal Company Ltd
Chase Mining Limited.
Cobalt Blue Holdings Ltd
China Molybdenum Co
Clean Teq
Evolution Mining
Fortescue Metals Group Ltd
Glencore Coal (NSW) Pty Limited

Gloucester Resources Ltd
Great Southern Energy Pty Ltd T/A Delta Coal
Heron Resources Limited
Hillgrove Mines Pty Ltd
Idemitsu Australia Resources Pty Ltd
Iluka Resources Pty Ltd
Kepco Bylong Australia Pty Ltd
Mach Energy Australia Pty Ltd

Newcrest Mining - Cadia Valley Operations
New South Resources Pty Ltd
Omya Australia Pty Ltd
Peabody Energy Australia
Regis Resources Limited
South 32 Illawarra Coal Holdings
Shenhua Watermark Coal Pty Limited
Shoalhaven Coal Pty Ltd
Silver Mines Ltd
Thiess Pty Ltd
Whitehaven Coal Limited
Wollongong Coal Limited
Wyong Areas Coal Joint Venture
Yancoal Australia Limited

Associate Members

Ampcontrol Pty Ltd
ARTC - Australian Rail Track Corporation
Ashurst
Aurizon Holdings LTD

B Marheine Holdings Ltd
Centre for Mined Land Rehabilitation
Civeo Pty Ltd
Coal Services Pty Ltd
ElectraNet
Emeco International Pty Ltd
EMM Consulting
EMS Group Pty Ltd
Genesee & Wyoming Australia Pty Ltd

Gold and Copper Resources Pty Limited
Golden Cross Resources Ltd
Helix Resources Ltd
Herbert Smith Freehills
Hunter Business Chamber 
Hughes Mining Services
Hansen Bailey Pty Ltd
Jervois Mining Limited
Sydney Mining Club
Jennmar Australia
Johnson Winter Slattery

Geos Mining
McCullough Robertson
Mitsubishi Development Pty Ltd
MRS Services Group Pty Ltd
NuCoal Resources Ltd
NSW Aboriginal Land Council
Niche Environment & Heritage
Newcastle Coal Infrastructure Group
Orica Australia Pty Ltd
Pacific National Pty Ltd
Paradigm Resources Pty Ltd
Peel Mining Ltd 
PricewaterhouseCoopers
Port Waratah Coal Services Limited
Hetherington Exploration and Mining Title Services Pty Ltd

Hughes Mining Services
Rangott Mineral Exploration Pty Ltd

Quarry Mining & Construction Equipment P/L
Rimfire Pacific Mining NL
Resource Strategies Pty Ltd
RW Corkery and Company

Sapphire Resources
Seyfarth Shaw Australia
Silver City Minerals Limited
Sparke Helmore Lawyers
UNSW Mining Engineering
TAFE NSW
Thomson Resources Ltd
Umwelt (Australia) Pty Limited
University of Wollongong
XCoal Energy and Resources

Thursday 7 August 2014

NSW Independent Commission Against Corruption's Operation Spicer hearing recommenced on 6 August 2014 and certain interested parties have been co-operating with the investigation



Federal Liberal Party director Brian Loughnane has been drawn into a corruption scandal embroiling the party after an inquiry heard allegations he rubberstamped the use of federal channels to subvert the NSW ban on donations from property developers.
The Independent Commission Against Corruption resumed public hearings on Wednesday in Operation Spicer, its inquiry in to Liberal Party fundraising.
The allegations aired during a two-hour opening address, delivered by counsel assisting the commission, Geoffrey Watson, SC, resulted in Liberal MPs Tim Owen and Andrew Cornwell stepping aside from the party and joining the crossbench….
In a sensational twist on Wednesday, Mr Owen's campaign manager Hugh Thomson has rolled over and is assisting the commission in return for an indemnity against prosecution.

7 News 6 August 2014:

In his opening address, counsel assisting the inquiry Geoffrey Watson SC said there were serious irregularities in the funding of the Liberal MP's campaign.
He also revealed that the funding of the neighbouring seat of Charlestown, which is now held by Government whip Andrew Cornwell, was being investigated.
"The evidence acquired so far clearly shows serious irregularities in the way those campaigns were conducted," Mr Watson said.
"Given what went on, a real question arises as to the validity of the result of the election in the seat of Newcastle."

Excerpts from Operation Spicer morning and afternoon hearing transcripts for 6 August 2014:

* Now, I’ll just move on to the last issue and I’ll be very brief about this
because we dealt with it in detail on the earlier occasion. During the course
of opening the earlier segment of this inquiry we said that during 2010 and
2011 Members of the Liberal Party of New South Wales used the Free
Enterprise Foundation as a means of washing and rechannelling donations
made by prohibited donors. We said that this was clearly done for the
 purpose of avoiding the impact of the Election Funding Act and that the
purpose was to disguise the true source of the money.
Further investigations have been undertaken and the result of those further
investigations confirms that what we said on the earlier occasion is accurate.
There is evidence that the use of the Free Enterprise Foundation in this
fashion was known at high levels in the Liberal Party.
It seems that the Federal Party was willing to allow itself to be used in that
way. We’ve been able to obtain an email sent on 23 July 2010, it was sent
by Simon McInnes who at that stage was the Finance Director the New
South Wales Liberal Party and it was sent by Mr McInnes to Colin Gracie
who at that stage was employed by the Federal Liberal Party, I’ll put it up
on the screen.
Mr McInnes’s inquiry was in respect of a donor was not a property
developer but Mr Gracie’s response is telling. If I just go down the bottom.
First email is to Mr Gracie, “We have a potential donor who wants to donate
towards the New South Wales campaign Banks for the Federal election but
don’t want to be disclosed under New South Wales disclosure laws not a
property developer.” Under Federal law they can donate up to $11,500 et
cetera, “Would the Federal Division be able to process donation.” There
may not be anything wrong with that but the answering is telling, “Hi
Simon, Brian Loughnane has agreed that for the time being the Federal
Secretariat will operate on the policy set out in the attachment. In effect
there is no benefit for a New South Wales donor to donate via the Federal
Secretariat”, and these are the words, “unless they are a property developer.”

* The first area of inquiry will look at the way that persons in the Liberal
Party conducted and funded campaigns for seats in the Hunter region in the
2011 State Election. Most of the time will be spend on the seat of
Newcastle but there is also a need to look at events which occurred in the
adjoining seat of Charlestown. The evidence acquired so far clearly shows
serious irregularities in the way those campaigns were conducted and
funded. Enough objective material has been collected so that we are
confident in saying that it will be established that the Liberal Party
campaign for the seat of Newcastle was partly funded from illegal sources.
The evidence is that there was a broad understanding that a number of
different prohibited donors would, acting under some subterfuge, provide
the funds to keep the campaign rolling. The persons involved in this
include, on the Liberal Party side, Hugh Thomson, he’s a lawyer who was
the campaign manager for Newcastle, Josh Hodges, a Liberal Party figure
who was brought in to co-manage the campaign, and the candidate himself,
Tim Owen.
The developers who contributed to the off-books funding include Buildev
Pty Limited, a company part-owned by Nathan Tinkler, Jeff McCloy, he is
the Mayor of Newcastle, and Hilton Grugeon, a prominent property
developer in the Hunter region. There were others as well.
There is also evidence that Michael Gallacher MLC was aware of these
arrangements and in fact suggested some of them. There is other evidence
that Christopher Hartcher MP was also aware and that he participated in
some aspects of it.

Commissioner, the scheme was crude but it was effective. Mr Hodges
raised invoices purporting to charge for consultancy services. I pause there
and say Mr Hodges has been helpful as well.
The invoices were a sham. No such services were provided. The payments
were designed to cover the salary payable to Mr Hodges for his work on Mr
Owen’s campaign. And now I’ll show as an example a false invoice raised
by Mr Hodges to Saddingtons Pty Limited. You’ll see it there, it’s to
Saddingtons and it’s for consultancy advice, commercial premises, Wyong.
Mr Hodges has told us that that was a sham invoice. Saddingtons is a
company owned by a local identity, Bill Saddington and it’s a major
hardware supplier. I’ll show another one. This is a false invoice raised by
Mr Hodges to accompany Australian Decal Sales and Manufacturing Pty
Limited. Australian Decal had provided services in Mr Owen’s campaign.
They provide those sorts of stickers, you might see them on the sides of
political candidates’ cars, that sort of thing. And you’ll see that here, that
Mr Hodges was asked to make up a false invoice addressed to Australian
Decal for consultancy advice and business plan. So that was sent on to
Australian Decal. And then I’ll show the next document because that sum,
7,000-odd to Mr Hodges was included in Australian Decal’s own invoice.
The people at Australian Decal have assisted us as well. The $7,000-odd to
Mr Hodges was included in Australian Decal’s invoice which they were told
should be issued to Buildev. Buildev eventually paid that.
Commissioner, it was also agreed that Mr Owen’s campaign needed a media
expert. A local radio identity, Luke Grant was available and with the
assistance of Michael Gallacher, MLC Mr Grant was brought in to advise on
the way that Mr Owen’s media campaign should be conducted. Now, Mr
Grant’s work was worthwhile and he was entitled to be paid for it. And
there’d been an agreed sum, he was to be paid $20,000. An arrangement
was made so that two local property developers paid for Mr Grant. Mr
Grant too has been helpful. The idea was that Mr Grant would issue
invoices to each of these property developers for $10,000, but not exactly
$10,000 because a round figure might look suspicious.

* The first is an incident which occurred when Mr Cornwell was at work. In a
previous life he was a veterinary surgeon in Cardiff. While in surgery
Mr Cornwell was called out for an urgent meeting with Jeff McCloy. They
sat in Mr McCloy’s car. Mr Cornwell thinks it was a Bentley. But anyway
they sat in Mr McCloy’s car and Mr McCloy passed over an envelope
containing a large wad of bills. Mr Cornwell says, and I think this is quite
understandable, that he was so shocked and embarrassed that he didn’t
respond. Mr Cornwell says that he didn’t even count the money but from
other means we know that it was $10,000. Mr Cornwell says he took the
money home, he put it in his sock drawer or somewhere for a while and then
later passed it to the president of the Charlestown branch Bob Bevan.
Mr Bevan was acting as a kind of, in this respect, a kind of de facto
campaign treasurer. Mr Cornwell explained to Mr Bevan, we’ve got this
from each of them, their evidence is perfectly consistent except in one
respect, Mr Cornwell explained to Mr Bevan that it was a donation which
had come from a donor who didn’t wish his identity be disclosed.
Mr Bevan remembered that it was Mac something, the name and, but that
didn’t mean anything to him at the time but anyway Mr Bevan has told us
that he could well understand a desire for anonymity in a small community.
Mr Bevan took the cash and I might say this is the only point where the
account of Mr Cornwell and Mr Bevan parts ways, Mr Bevan says that it
was in the more traditional brown paper bag and not an envelope but
anyway, Mr Bevan took the cash, he did count it, it was $10,000 in $100
bills. He banked it into a business account of his, a company called
Harmony Hill Pty Limited and when the funds cleared Mr Bevan then
donated if that’s the right word, donated the money to the Liberal Party
under the name of Harmony Hill.
Now I understand that Mr McCloy will deny that this ever occurred. It will
be a matter for the Commission as to whether or not Mr McCloy is believed
on that although it would seem a very strange story for Mr Cornwell and Mr
Bevan to invent. If this exchange did occur, and especially if Mr McCloy
continues to maintain that it did not, then the Commission would be entitled
to draw an inference that the payment was made with malign intent.

* I want to say something now about Andrew Cornwell and about Tim Owen.
Both Mr Cornwell and Mr Owen were outstanding candidates for
Parliament, each had a lucrative career and each was making a sacrifice in
seeking political office. Neither was a career politician, they were not party
machine men and they were being enlisted by the Liberal Party because they
were outstanding candidates. One can see how the experience of each made
them susceptible to being manipulated by wealthy individuals who wanted
political preferences, especially if those wealthy individuals had pre-existing
support of elements within the Party machine.
Mr Cornwell has been helpful to ICAC. He has given cooperation. His
actions may have been unwise but it would seem to us, this is just an
expression of opining between Mr O’Mahoney and myself, but it would
seem to us that those actions may have been the product of a degree of
inexperience in the face of high pressure tactics from some pretty
determined characters. I should add that there is no evidence which
suggests that Mr Cornwell actually gave any preferences to Mr McCloy or
Mr Grugeon.
Mr Owen might be in the same class. It remains to be seen the extent to
which he cooperates with this inquiry. Mr Owen was brought into the
campaign late, he was surrounded by persons whose motives were not pure.
There is hard evidence of misdeeds in the campaign in Newcastle and the
Commission expects and is entitled to expect that it will get the full
cooperation of Mr Owen.

* MR WATSON: Now, Mr Bosman, I’m not going to labour this because the
statement will speak for itself, but I feel as though people are entitled to
know something of your background, those who haven’t read the statement.
You’ve had plenty of experience in the Liberal Party and managing
campaigns?---I have.
I’ll just give some examples. You’ve been a campaign manager for the
former Prime Minister, Mr Howard?---Correct.
And you were the campaign manager for John Alexander when he won back
Bennelong?---I was.
And in 2007 the Liberal Party came to you and asked you if you would
provide your services. I just said 2007?---2011.
Yeah, I’m way behind aren’t I? It’s a poor start, my first witness. In 2011
the New South Wales Liberal Party came to you and asked you to provide
your services to helping campaigns which were being conducted on the
Central Coast and in the Hunter?---It was actually in 2010, November 2010.
They came to you for the 2011 campaign?---Correct.
And I think you were given a fairly dramatic title, I think it was called
battleground director?---I was.
And so was the battleground director you were looking after two sitting
members and a number of other candidates who were trying to win seats?
---Correct.
I’ll just detail those. In terms of the Central Coast you were looking after
the campaign for a sitting member, that’s Chris Hartcher?---Yes.
And the seat was Terrigal?---Yes.
And on the Central Coast there were three candidates who were trying to
win from Labor seats, Darren Webber at Wyong?---Yes.
Chris Spence at The Entrance?---Yes.
And Chris Holstein at Gosford?---Correct.
In the Hunter you were looking after one sitting member, that was Craig
Baumann who was the Member for Port Stephens?---Yes.
And you were also looking after four candidates who were trying to win
seats from Labor, the first was Tim Owen in Newcastle?---Yes.
Another was Andrew Cornwell in Charlestown?---Yes.
And another was Garry Edwards in Swansea?---Yes.
And the fourth was Robyn Parker in Maitland?---That’s correct.
Now your work as I understand it was to oversee the campaign to make sure
that they were in the first place complying with the requirements of the
Liberal Party?---My focus was on the campaigns for the seats we were
trying to win, the sitting member seats I was not really involved in their
campaigns.
All right. I should have made that clear. In terms of the sitting members,
that’s Mr Hartcher and Mr Baumann, the Liberal Party was actually quite
confident that they would retain those seats in the 2011 election?---Yes.
And if we just go back to the detail of it, during any election campaign more
time is devoted to those seats which are in the other party’s hands but which
are winnable?---Yes, unless it’s a very marginal seat that you’re holding and
you want to hold onto it.

Monday 27 June 2016

A little bit of local history for Australian Infrastructure Developments, its Queensland backers and potential overseas investors


Since time immemorial there have been people living in the Clarence Valley

Some families have been in this valley for thousands of years, some for over one hundred years and some less than ten years, but they are all part of the same vibrant local communities.

Connection with the Clarence River and its flood plain runs deep in these communities.

Their allegiance has always been Clarence first when the valley needs protection, but do understand they are also part of the bigger Northern Rivers region of New South Wales.

In the 1850’s Clarence Valley residents successfully resisted moves to place the region within the boundaries of the Colony of Queensland by sending petitions to the British Parliament.

Indigenous communities along the Clarence River protected the reef “Dirragun” in the 1950s, from NSW Government plans to remove this important cultural and spiritual site at the river mouth, by speaking up about its importance.

People from the Clarence Valley were involved in the battle of Terania Creek in 1979 and subsequent protests which defeated NSW Wran Government and timber industry plans for extensive logging of native forest in the Terania and Mt. Nardi areas, eventually leading to the creation of the 8,080ha Nightcap National Park which was World Heritage listed in 1986.

In the 1980s Clarence Valley residents helped save the Washpool rainforest.

In 1988-1989 the Clarence Valley successfully opposed the Wran & Greiner governments’ support of the Daishowa proposal to establish a pulp paper mill on the Clarence River.

The Yaegl people of the Clarence Valley launched a native title claim for the Clarence River from Harwood Bridge to the sea in 1996, in part to protect the Clarence River estuary from overdevelopment which would destroy environment and connection to land. Native Title was granted in 2015.

1999 saw the Ross gold mine at Timbarra (in the upper reaches of the Clarence River catchment) permanently closed due to sustained opposition from the northern NSW region, including people in the Clarence Valley.

Along came 2007 and the Clarence Valley saw off the federal Howard Government’s proposal to dam and divert water from the Clarence River catchment for the benefit of mines and irrigators in inland New South Wales.




In July 2014 the value we placed on protecting the river systems and ensuring water security for the region helped convinced Labor's Janelle Saffin to co-sponsor an urgency motion at a NSW State Conference calling for a CSG Free Northern Rivers.



By 2015 the valley had also been part of the broad community movement which sent the NSW Baird Government and the coal seam gas industry packing from the Northern Rivers region:


 Photographs contributed

Now the 2016 federal election campaign has rolled around and the Clarence Greens are saying this:

While market goers in Yamba on 26 June were receiving handouts like this flyer:
And taking home this bumper sticker:


The question that Australian Infrastructure Developments Pty Ltd, its backers and potential investors in the Yamba industrial port plan, have to ask themselves is this; “Will the Clarence Valley show us the door as well?”

I rather suspect that it will.

Wednesday 5 May 2021

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison has ordered an urgent review of the 42 year old National Australia Day Council


On 1 May 2021 The Saturday Paper reported that Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison has ordered an urgent review of the board of the National Australia Day Council, established as the Australia Day Committee in 1979. 


National Australia Day Council Limited (NADC) is a not-for-profit Commonwealth owned corporation, within the Prime Minister's portfolio responsibilities, as well as being a tax exempt charity which is the “coordinating body for Australia Day celebrations across the nation and for the Australian of the Year Awards. The NADC heads a network of eight state and territory Australia Day affiliate organisations and 780 local Australia Day committees….reports to the Commonwealth Parliament under the provisions of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013. The operations of the company are overseen by a board of Directors appointed by the Prime Minister”.


The NADC board of directors in 2019-20 were:


Ms Danielle Roche OAM Chair

Ms Robbie Sefton Deputy Chair

Ms Stephanie Foster PSM

Dr Robert Isaacs AM

Dr Stepan Kerkyasharian AO

Ms Jane McNamara

Major General (Ret’d) Maurie McNarn AO

Mr Richard Rolfe AM

Mr Norman Schueler OAM

Ms Naseema Sparks AM appointment ended 25 June 2020.


As of 1 May 2021 the position of Chair, Deputy Chair, and two Director/Non Executive Director positions are vacant. Danielle Roche and Maurie McNarn are no longer on the board. Robbie Sefton is no longer Deputy Chair but remains a Director/Non Executive Director and Alison Page became a board member in September 2020.


NADC employs around 12 people full-time and is located in Canberra, ACT.


In its last published annual report NADC stated that:


During the period ended 30 June 2020, the NADC and Network continued to deliver both national and state programs. The Australian Government, through the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, provided a total of $14,665,913 funding for the company. Sponsors provided a total of $2,109,860 for national programs, and part of this funding was allocated to state and territory Australia Day affiliates for local projects.


NADC does not appear to have any significant debt. There appears to have been no ministerial directions received, no government policy orders received and no judicial decisions or decisions of administrative tribunals were made concerning NADC during the 2019-20 reporting period.


So what has made the Prime Minister hot under the collar? After all, he makes those NADC board appointments.


Could it be that Morrison is uncomfortable with the fact that from January 2020 NADC through its “The Story of Australia” advertising placed a much greater emphasis on the histories and stories of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people? That he didn't like the NADC commitment for 2020-21 to "work to expand the reach of our Respect, Reflect, Celebrate: We’re all part of the story message into Australia Day events in every State and Territory, every town and city"?


Or was he incensed to the core of his narrow, historically inaccurate world view by this event?


"At dawn on Australia Day 2020, Port Phillip City Council in Melbourne and the Boonwurrung Land and Sea Council, with the support of the NADC, held a We-Akon Dilinja (Mourning-Reflection) ceremony."


Chronologically it seems that Morrison's unusually short extension of Danielle Roche's contact as a NADOC director, which saw her ending her association with the National Australia Day Council on 31 March 2021, possibly may have followed on from his personal dissatisfaction with the 2020 Respect, Reflect, Celebrate Australia Day message which acknowledged Aboriginal dispossession commencing in 1788.  Within four weeks of becoming prime minister Scott Morrison in 2018 was on record as viewing any such acknowledgement as "indulgent self loathing".


Or is it that in 2021 NADC made Grace Tame @TamePunk Australian of the Year and she refused be cowed by his ‘eminent’ position or pull her punches when it came to publicly speaking of institutional sexual abuse, sexual assault and sexual harassment


Or is Morrison upset that on 25 January 2021 the NADC Board made a referral to the Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission (ACIC) of the leak of some Australia Day award recipients' names, given strong suspicions that there was an attempt by a person or persons to manipulate the betting market? For operational reasons about 180 individuals were informed of the winners names in December 2020 and that possibly would have included one or more staff in the Office of Prime Minster and Cabinet. No award finalists are ever informed before the official announcement on 26 January.